Hi,Thank you for the help. Let me give a little more information. I shot the panorama using a gigapan head. There are 288 photos (jpegs) stitched together. I processed through autopano giga and then put the finished panoramas into panotourpro.

Here is one finished panorama. The stitching errors are rather obvious. Are there any tutorials or videos that could help me to understand the workflow in correcting this issue?I am wondering if the issue is the amount of photos being used? I know the program is agitated by different patterns, so the rug certainly doesn't help.

Again, I truly appreciate the help. -Sarah

Attachments

Here is one finished panorama. The stitching errors are rather obvious. Are there any tutorials or videos that could help me to understand the workflow in correcting this issue?

Hi,Thank you for the help. Let me give a little more information. I shot the panorama using a gigapan head. There are 288 photos (jpegs) stitched together. I processed through autopano giga and then put the finished panoramas into panotourpro.

Here is one finished panorama. The stitching errors are rather obvious. Are there any tutorials or videos that could help me to understand the workflow in correcting this issue?I am wondering if the issue is the amount of photos being used? I know the program is agitated by different patterns, so the rug certainly doesn't help.

Again, I truly appreciate the help. -Sarah

Attachments

Here is one finished panorama. The stitching errors are rather obvious. Are there any tutorials or videos that could help me to understand the workflow in correcting this issue?

Hi,Thank you for the help. Let me give a little more information. I shot the panorama using a gigapan head. There are 288 photos (jpegs) stitched together. I processed through autopano giga and then put the finished panoramas into panotourpro.

Here is one finished panorama. The stitching errors are rather obvious. Are there any tutorials or videos that could help me to understand the workflow in correcting this issue?I am wondering if the issue is the amount of photos being used? I know the program is agitated by different patterns, so the rug certainly doesn't help.

Again, I truly appreciate the help. -Sarah

Attachments

Here is one finished panorama. The stitching errors are rather obvious. Are there any tutorials or videos that could help me to understand the workflow in correcting this issue?

Sarah - which lens did you use? Did you use DX or FX? Why so much pictures? Did you VERY carefully stup your NPP?You see: shooting indoors means focusing short distances. The shorter the distance the more important is the optimal alignmet of the NPP.

So you´d be far better of using a fisheye indoors. But the Gigapan head limits the fisheye. So i suggest to use about 17 or 20mm for indoor-shots using the Gigapan - btw.: WHICH typ of Gigapan?

Thanks for your helpful response. I am using a Nikon D7100 AF-S NIKKOR 18-300mm DX 1:3.5-5.6 on a Gigapan Epic Pro head. The reason for so many photos is due to the FOV, which is 10.9. This had seemed to be the best way to get the zoom with the most amount of detail. Should I adjust? I was pretty sure I had the NNP secure, but would you mind discussing that a bit more? What should I adjust/ change? I may be able to get a fish eye lens, though I doubt it in the near future.Isn't there an insoftware way of adjusting this?Please forgive my ignorance. I have learned all of this on a fast curve. It is not the type of photography I am used to.

Thanks for your helpful response. I am using a Nikon D7100 AF-S NIKKOR 18-300mm DX 1:3.5-5.6 on a Gigapan Epic Pro head. The reason for so many photos is due to the FOV, which is 10.9. This had seemed to be the best way to get the zoom with the most amount of detail. Should I adjust?

Well - the details lin thi room don´t seem to be of so much importance to show them extremely detailed, right? So i suggest to use 18mm for having the room´s visual impression.

saanthonbunny wrote:I was pretty sure I had the NNP secure, but would you mind discussing that a bit more? What should I adjust/ change?

When you shoot indoors the NPP is much more important than shooting outdoors - because the camera-object distance is much closer indoors and you need pretty much more DOF - meaning smaller aperture and careful focusing to achieve that.

All in all a shorter lens definitely is a preferable way in this case. Generally i suggest to shoot around f8 - 11 - most lenses have their performance-peak here and the DOF of a 20 or even 35mm lens is quite usable indoors, when you focus carefully and calculate the hyperfocal-distance.

saanthonbunny wrote:Isn't there an insoftware way of adjusting this?

No.

saanthonbunny wrote:Please forgive my ignorance. I have learned all of this on a fast curve. It is not the type of photography I am used to.

I may have been misleading there. When I said zoom, I am not referring to the lens. We always shoot at 18 mm to maintain the visual impression (as you say ) I mean the zoom capability in the finished panorama. And, as luck would have it, it is actually extremely important to maintain a high level of detail in these panorama tours. They are so higher ups can identify issues within the rooms, so they need to be able to zoom right in close and have that clarity. Do you suggest a different way?I also wonder if the technique in this video might be a viable option: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K26Ki4hY ... E590A546A9 That was what I was wondering when I mentioned trying to fix the issue within the software. Also, I very much admire the panorama you posted earlier. In a perfect world, where I could replicate your process step by step, what would I be doing? Would you be willing to share your process?

saanthonbunny wrote: We always shoot at 18 mm to maintain the visual impression (as you say ) I mean the zoom capability in the finished panorama.

Sorry - are you sure you shot this pano with 18mm. I doubt you would have needed 288 shots but no more than 40 or so instead.

Looking @100% shows that your equirectangular image isn´t blown up to much more than 1:1.

saanthonbunny wrote:And, as luck would have it, it is actually extremely important to maintain a high level of detail in these panorama tours. They are so higher ups can identify issues within the rooms, so they need to be able to zoom right in close and have that clarity. Do you suggest a different way?

I think there are some options to save your pano by editing the CPs manually. Just give it a try!

saanthonbunny wrote:Also, I very much admire the panorama you posted earlier. In a perfect world, where I could replicate your process step by step, what would I be doing? Would you be willing to share your process?

What you can do to achieve the results i get: just setup your rig more carefully and get used to AutoPanoGiga intensely. That´s it - no rocket-science at all Ok - some knowledge in photograhic craftsmenship definitely also helps . .